The Federal Housing Administration's single-family mortgage insurance fund could be sitting on a deficit of at least $40 billion, according to a former Fannie Mae executive who now bills himself as an expert on affordable housing. Testifying before a House subcommittee Thursday morning, Ed Pinto, who served as Fannie's chief credit officer two decades ago, said FHA has $30 billion in reserve funds but at the end of September probably had $70 billion in losses on its $725 billion book of business. Mr. Pinto called the current $30 billion cash cushion at the government's mortgage insurance agency a "bookkeeping entry" that has already been spent by the government to reduce the federal deficit. Today, FHA originations account for about 25% of the market — and growing. According to figures compiled by National Mortgage News, FHA had a market share of just 2.5% back in 2006. (Some of that includes VA-backed loans.) FHA commissioner David Stevens has said repeatedly that the insurance fund would not need a taxpayer bail out. Mr. Stevens told NMN recently that, "I have read so many stories attacking FHA without relevant data." He added that, "We are insuring the best quality book of business we have ever seen in history — bringing in a lot of fresh MI premiums." Mr. Pinto worked at Fannie Mae from 1987 to 1989.
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Panorama Mortgage Group's channels each had a different name, and SimplyPMG reflects a new emphasis on straightforwardness, said Hector Amendola, president.
May 29 -
The new unit, renamed XedaLink, will serve some of Xactus' direct competitors in the consumer reporting agencies space through a different platform.
May 29 -
The FHA published a request for information in the Federal Register Friday, looking for stakeholder comment on how to improve and modernize property standards.
May 29 -
Some international investors, who represent roughly 20% of Ginnie's market, are gravitating to real estate mortgage investment conduit securities.
May 29 -
The total delinquency rate rose 0.2 percentage points annually in March, with the share of loans 90 days late rising out of the range they were in since 2024.
May 29 -
The test of automated risk assessments for government-sponsored enterprise-eligible mortgages are designed to help determine when waivers might be possible.
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